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Sunset Song (Canons) Main - Canons Edition, Kindle Edition
'Left me scorched' Ali Smith
'Unforgettable' Guardian
Faced with a choice between a harsh farming life and the world of books and learning, Chris Guthrie chooses to remain in her rural community, bound by her intense love of the land. But everything changes with the arrival of the First World War and Chris finds her land altered beyond recognition.
One of the greatest and most heartbreaking love stories ever told,, Sunset Song offers a powerful portrait of a land and people in turmoil.
- ISBN-13978-1838851972
- EditionMain - Canons
- PublisherCanongate Canons
- Publication dateMarch 30, 2006
- LanguageEnglish
- File size5307 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
An evocative look at female life on the Scottish frontier . . . Sunset Song is the story of a resilient young woman during the early 20th century. Her profound identification with the land is her source of renewal and strength as she endures harrowing family circumstances and, eventually, the devastating fallout of the First World War-- "Los Angeles Times"
Chris Guthrie is the most passionate and appealing heroine in Scottish literature; Grassic Gibbon's magnificent novel is fresh, powerful and timeless--ANNE DONOVAN
His three great novels have the impetus and music of mountain burns in full spate-- "Observer"
Portrayed with a lyrical intensity that echoes through the years and still resonates today-- "New York Times"
If this new edition is prompting you to re-read Sunset Song after many years, as I have just done, you will find it has lost none of its appeal and emotion. And if you are about to read this remarkable novel for the first time, you are embarking on a profound journey--NICOLA STURGEON
Sunset Song's great gripping hybrid of melodrama and realism . . . left me scorched--ALI SMITH
It is gritty and passionate and one of Scotland's great 20th-century novels-- "Daily Express"
A British literary classic-- "New York Times"
When I read Lewis Grassic Gibbon's Sunset Song in my mid-teens I entered into it with such wholehearted love that I longed to live inside it . . . The rhythms of the prose are incantatory, musical . . . Chris is the centre of the novel and its genius, vivid on every page where she's present--TESSA HADLEY "Guardian"
Review
It is gritty and passionate and one of Scotland's great 20th-century novels ― Daily Express
If this new edition is prompting you to re-read Sunset Song after many years, as I have just done, you will find it has lost none of its appeal and emotion. And if you are about to read this remarkable novel for the first time, you are embarking on a profound journey -- NICOLA STURGEON
An unforgettable evocation of a way of life that has slipped away . . . It is a love song for a landscape and language still familiar - and precious - to a generation born long after he died . . . Chris is one of the great women of 20th-century fiction ― Guardian
An evocative look at female life on the Scottish frontier . . . Sunset Song is the story of a resilient young woman during the early 20th century. Her profound identification with the land is her source of renewal and strength as she endures harrowing family circumstances and, eventually, the devastating fallout of the First World War ― Los Angeles Times
Chris Guthrie is the most passionate and appealing heroine in Scottish literature; Grassic Gibbon's magnificent novel is fresh, powerful and timeless -- ANNE DONOVAN
When I read Lewis Grassic Gibbon's Sunset Song in my mid-teens I entered into it with such wholehearted love that I longed to live inside it . . . The rhythms of the prose are incantatory, musical . . . Chris is the centre of the novel and its genius, vivid on every page where she's present -- TESSA HADLEY ― Guardian
A British literary classic ― New York Times
His three great novels have the impetus and music of mountain burns in full spate ― Observer
Sunset Song's great gripping hybrid of melodrama and realism . . . left me scorched -- ALI SMITH
From the Back Cover
"This book may be read with delight the world over." New York Times
"[Sunset Song's] great gripping hybrid of melodrama and realism . . . left me scorched." Ali Smith
One of the most acclaimed Scottish novels of the twentieth century, Sunset Song is the first and most celebrated book in Lewis Grassic Gibbons' great trilogy, A Scots Quair.
The turmoil that devastated the rural community in Scotland in the years up to and beyond the First World War has a powerful impact on the life of the heroine, Chris Guthrie. Grassic Gibbon endows her struggle and enduring strength with a lyrical intensity that echoes through the years, distilling the essence of the country and its people.
About the Author
James Leslie Mitchell, 'Lewis Grassic Gibbon' (1901-35), was born and brought up in the rich farming land of Scotland's North-East coast. After a brief journalistic career, he joined the Royal Army Service Corps in 1919, serving in Persia, India and Egypt before he spent six years as a clerk in the RAF. He married Rebecca Middleton in 1925, and became a full-time writer in 1929. He was a prolific writer of novels, short stories and essays and had seventeen full length books published before his untimely death at the age of thirty-four. He adopted his maternal grandmother's name for his Scottish work including A Scots Quair: Sunset Song, Cloud Howe and Grey Granite. An unfinished novel, The Speak of the Mearns, was published posthumously in 1982.
Product details
- ASIN : B002VNFNUQ
- Publisher : Canongate Canons; Main - Canons edition (March 30, 2006)
- Publication date : March 30, 2006
- Language : English
- File size : 5307 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 308 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #155,747 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #97 in Classic British & Irish Fiction
- #469 in Classic Literary Fiction
- #1,211 in Small Town & Rural Fiction (Kindle Store)
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I am sure that in the day it was written, it was somewhat shocking. This was recommended to me by a librarian and I am so glad that I took the time to read it.
I recommend this book to anyone who loves history and great writing.
Top reviews from other countries
As another reviewer has observed, it is not a particularly easy read, because the author writes in long convoluted sentences. But the more you get into the book the easier it becomes. Sunset Song is a remarkable and a poetic portrait of rural Scotland at a time when much was changing due to the capitalisation of agriculture the coming of the Great War. But the novel is also a personal story, that of Chris Guthrie, and it seems remarkable to me than a man in the first part of the twentieth centuary could write so intimately about a the life of a young woman. It fair takes your breath away.
This is no po-faced novel. It abounds with humour. "She looked a daft-like keek for she was lifting up her hands and her eyes like a heifer choked on a turnip...." That is a decription of the figure of Faith, the sister of Hope and Charity, in the church’s stained glass window. “For if there’s a body on earth that would skin a tink for his sark and preach for a pension in purgatory, it’s an Auld Kirk minister.” Grassic Gibbon is fairly scathing about the clergy, but as the relatives of the fallen stand at the newly inscribed war memorial, it is the minister who provides an eloquent summation of what has been lost measured not only in lives, but in the passing of a way of life.
There are two more books in the ‘Scots Quair’ series, so I will shortly be placing my order.
Quean - girl
Kye - cows
Childe – an adult male
Keek - to look, shyly
Heifer – a young cow
Sark - shirt





